Travis B. wrote: ↑Tue Mar 12, 2024 6:39 pmWhat I meant was that Czech was suppressed in public life as a whole for a few centuries in the Czech lands, yet it somehow managed to not only survive but actually replace German in public life (of course, this was made definitive by the expulsion of ethnic Germans from Czechoslovakia at the end of WW2), yet Irish is practically very marginalized (and it is starting to show even in the Gaeltacht today) in Ireland today despite the best (if often incompetent) efforts of the Irish government to keep it afloat.
I think a big factor is universal public education, which doesn't really get started in most of Europe until the mid- to late 19th century. In the UK, not only were Irish and Welsh completely excluded from the educational system, it became a vehicle for actively extirpating them. Wales, for instance, experienced something known as the
"Treason of the Blue Books" (Brad y Llyfrau Gleision), a parliamentary report which claimed that knowledge of the Welsh language made the Welsh backward and ornery and should be stamped out. It was the same story in Ireland--which as others have noted was reeling from the Famine and experiencing mass outmigration (chiefly to English-speaking countries). So you you had generations of Irish- and Welsh-speaking pupils who literally had the language
beaten out of them. (You can read about this in the well-known personal histories of the early 20th century, such as Séamus Ó Grianna's
Nuair a bhí mé óg and Muiris Ó Súilleabháin's
Fiche Blian ag Fás.) Those that didn't often came to see it as their ticket to survival.
Did this also happen in Bohemia? Admittedly, I'm not as familiar with the history of the Czech language or literature of the Czech Revival, but I've never heard of anything similar happening there. Like Mark says, the Hapsburg Empire was multilingual and there was never any concerted attempt to make it monolingual, as occurred in France or Spain. Germanicisation was confined to an elite and when the attitudes of that elite shifted, so did the language.
(It might also be relevant here that a significant portion of the German-speaking population in the Czech Lands were Jewish, and we all know what became of them.)